alexsarll: (crest)
I wasn't that surprised to learn that Seroxat causes birth defects because, while technology keeps producing devices which can do ever more marvellous things all in one tiny package, Seroxat exists as the equal and opposite reaction, a big bundle of bad effects in one heavily-marketed little pill. I'm just waiting for the revelations as to how many greenhouse gases are produced in its manufacture, and confirmation of which loopy dictators are on the stuff, but I already assume that it causes global warming and genocide too. The only great evil I have trouble linking to it is mayonnaise but trust me, there will be a link somewhere.

If your post-Wire reading has found you drawn in to the corrupt, skin-deep 'renewal' of Richard Price's New York, but you want something which comes in smaller chunks, I recommend you take a look at American Gangster and Other Tales of New York by Mark Jacobson. I'm not making a big leap here; I picked it up because I didn't quite feel up to Clockers at the moment and this looked similar, and lo and behold, there's Price doing an introduction. This book gets a lot of bad reviews from online chuckleheads who didn't notice the subtitle and thought it would just be the story of Harlem kingpin Frank Lucas, as seen in the recent film. No, it's an anthology; the article which inspired the film is here, but so is the one which became the sitcom Taxi (anthologies often take their title from one component piece, which nonetheless makes up a small proportion of the overall page count. Get over it). And like The Wire, this is a city's story told in part through its crime, but also through its media, its politicians, its oddballs. Even the weakest piece here, on Wynton bloody Marsalis, speaks to the overall theme of what New York has gained since its "near death" in the seventies, and what it has lost. Selected from three decades of journalism, mostly in New York magazine, it's a book which tells you a lot and yet does so in handily commute-length pieces.
(New York has New York magazine and The New Yorker. I am unaware of any mag called London, and The Londoner was Ken's crappy propaganda freesheet, mercifully put out of our misery by Boris. Why is that? I love Smoke dearly, it's the only magazine I buy, but it's not the same thing)

[livejournal.com profile] cappuccino_kid likes arty European films. I tend to favour Anglophone fare (though there is an anime exemption) and ideally I like it to feature explosions, drunken antics and/or an old-fashioned stiff upper lip. So when he pressed Last Year In Marienbad on me, I will confess to some reluctance. Nor was I initially convinced by dialogue like "You confine me in a whispering silence worse than death...like coffins buried side by side in a frozen garden", or the beautiful women and suave but odd-faced men, standing unnaturally still while the camera played silly buggers; this is a self-parodic French film par excellence. And yet, I wasn't smirking. All those tics I'd seen done to death and parodied a dozen times...somehow here they work. The film feels like a dream, rather than feeling like it's trying to feel like a dream. It transfixes. It is beautiful, as it roams in and around an apparently infinite baroque hotel, the doors and corridors expressing its theme of deferral. And it is really rather haunting.
alexsarll: (bernard)
Boris scrapped his first bendy buses today. His reign has now justified itself, and anything else is just a bonus.

If you ever find yourself having a terrible moment of clarity about the gigging scene, wondering whether it isn't just a terrible parade of narcissists and special needs cases taking the name of art in vain - seriously, go see an open mic poetry night and your worries will vanish in an instant.
The band-based elements of the evening worked rather better (OK, shambolically - but entertainingly so, particularly the version of 'Unity Mitford' which, courtesy of a clown's guitar, ended up somewhere between Slash and 'My Lovely Horse'), and one of the Indelicates-affiliated poets (plays god in The Book of Job - The Musical, apparently) had his moments. And afterwards, after one of my occasional forays into roadieing (roadying?), we met some very generous but totally lost fruit thieves. But the open mic stuff...OK, if you do take the advice in the first paragraph, be aware that you do so at your own risk.

There's an art exhibition underway in the 'phone boxes behind the Royal Academy - because apparently that's where rejected pictures for the Summer Exhibition get left. It's pseudonymous, perhaps for legal reasons, but...well, some of the booths are quite shiney on the inside, shall we say. I like the postcard reading 'email mum' in among the tart cards, but possibly the most powerful contribution is the way that one of the booths has an overwhelming smell of stale urine - undoubtedly a comment on the degree to which Marcel Duchamp's urinal has at once defined and limited so much modern art. Right?

A lot of people have suggested - I hope in jest - that unemployment would see me getting into daytime TV. Even before the age of the DVD box set, I had quite enough reading and wandering to catch up on that this was never going to happen, but I was looking forward to some classic "films so sad they're only shown when the country's at work", and until this week I'd been disappointed. Sure, there were some Powell & Pressburgers, but I already have those on DVD (having got into them, if memory serves, through a screening of A Matter of Life and Death last time I was dole scum, a decade back), some Miyazaki I've already seen on Film4, but this week there was finally something new (well, old, obviously, but new to me). First, Jimmy Cagney in Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye. My policy of attempting any film which has given the Flaming Stars a title doesn't always work out - I think the only real great I ever found that way was The Day the Earth Caught Fire, and plenty were abandoned in short order - but this is a nice, nasty little gangster flick of the old school, all greed and brutality and innocence led astray in a world where, Production Code or no, it's clear there was no other choice. And then on Thursday, Frank Capra's Lost Horizon, the original Shangri-La story, which influenced everything from Iron Fist to Neal Stephenson's Anathem but has a tragic, terribly real escapism all its own, Ronald Colman the great diplomat who finds an earthly paradise away from all the struggle of the outside world - but can he bear to stay there, and if he does, what will it cost him? So seductive, and so much more topical than whichever catchpenny nonsense is being shown in primetime about the State of Things, with the inhabitants of the happy valley perplexed by the pointless avarice of the outside world: "Look at the world today. Is there anything more pitiful? What madness there is! What blindness! What unintelligent leadership! A scurrying mass of bewildered humanity, crashing headlong against each other, propelled by an orgy of greed and brutality."
alexsarll: (crest)
From some of the press its minor rebrand received, you'd have thought Rise was being transformed into Nuremberg N4, rather than having its slogan tweaked from "Unite Against Racism" to the cheerier "Celebrating Diversity". I can attest to a disappointing lack of torchlit rallies, lynch-mobs or BoriSS corps. Although the pedestrian Brit rapper on the bill ("before Oysters there was two pound travelcards" - bless) did get everyone to put one hand in the air and chant "One nation, one people", which perhaps could have done with a rethink.
Highlights: Kitty, Daisy & Lewis' old-time rock'n'roll worked surprisingly well in a sunny field at lunchtime (where 'lunch' = 'gin'). The Aliens would have bored me rigid in a traditional gig setting, but as very loud background noise, they were just the ticket. Beardyman is impressive in a way very few beatboxers can manage, and once the Dub Pistols got Terry Hall on (for 'Our Lips Are Sealed', 'Problem Is' and 'Gangsters'), they were glorious.
Also, the man who'd got around the ban on dogs by smuggling his dachshund in a bag.
Lowlights: The aforementioned rappers, comprehensively pwned when the DJ followed their set with 'Witness (One Hope)' to show how UK rap should be done. Sharon Jones & the Dap Kings - even if I hadn't seen them on Jools Holland, I would still class them as 'Jools Holland music'. Everything I saw on my brief tour of the other stages, including one band who sounded like the Brand New Heavies, and some clowns called Yabba Funk with a song whose title translated as 'Victory to Africa' - whatever angle I look at that sentiment from, it's at best meaningless and at worst vile.
But below all that - CSS. Dear heavens. I was never quite as caught up in them as some people - possibly because I only thought Lovefoxxx 'quite cute' rather than collapsing into the same paroxysms as many - but they made some fun party tracks. Since when they've got miserable, learnt how to play, improved their English and stopped being randomly rude - ie, systematically erased everything people liked about them. Oh, and picked up a new drummer from The Cooper Temple Clause, a band I liked but who judging from this and the other one's stint with the tit from the Libertines, have taken some sort of oath of post-TCTC rubbishness so as not to eclipse their legacy. Lovefoxxx attempts to bring some liveliness to proceedings by coming on in hard hat, facial stripes and a cloak, but that cannot disguise what a dreadfully dull band they have become. A couple of songs in, I cannot take it anymore - "If the next song's not 'Death from Above', I'm going". It's not. I go, and sit on the Parkland Walk reading Philip K Dick for a bit instead.

Other than that I have been:
Seeing MJ Hibbett's My Exciting Life In Rock preview;
Reading Ian Kelly's new Casanova biography, which is extremely funny, very well-researched, and was apparently proofread by a dyslexic chimpanzee;
Building castles in the clouds.

December 2017

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